Edenvale Airport


Edenvale Airport is located west of Edenvale, Ontario, Canada.

History

RCAF and World War II Airfield 1940-1946

From 1940 to 1945 it was known as RCAF Detachment Edenvale as an emergency relief field supporting Camp Borden and used by the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan's No. 1 Service Flying Training School. After 1946 the RCAF buildings at Edenvale were demolished and the site abandoned.

Aerodrome Information

In approximately 1942 the aerodrome was listed as RCAF Aerodrome - Edenvale, Ontario at with a variation of 8 degrees west and elevation of. Three runways were listed as follows:
Runway NameLengthWidthSurface
3/21Hard Surfaced
8/26Hard Surfaced
14/32Hard Surfaced

Civilian Use 1950-1959

In 1950 the airport became a civilian aerodrome, but for almost a decade it was mostly used for race car events and referred to as Stayner or Edenvale Raceway. It was abandoned again in 1959.

Canadian Army 1962-1988

The Canadian Army took over the site in 1962 and referred to as Edenvale Transmitter Station Bunker, a remote radio communications station to support the Cold War effort. The military closed the station in 1988 and left by 1994. The site's bunker, a twin of the Diefenbunker in Ottawa, was sealed off in 2005.

Civilian Use 2002-present

Since 2002, the airfield has operated as a private civilian aerodrome.
At the northeast end of the airfield is an ex-Czechoslovakian MiG-15bisSB on static display.
In November 2018 it was announced that the Canadian Air and Space Museum, which was forced out of Downsview Park in Toronto, will reopen at Edenvale Airport in 2019 and be renamed the Canadian Air & Space Conservancy.